Saturday, February 18, 2017

Things
are definitely getting interesting, if you haven't noticed. Two of the
stories that have attracted my interest recently are, firstly, the
studies of vaccines conducted in Italy, and (surprise surprise) the
Italians found all sorts of ...well... just plain old crud in them.
It's been getting so bizarre than there are actually indications that animal
vaccines are cleaner than the vaccines that Big Pharma wants to give
you and your kids. Secondly, the other story that has captured my
interest was, of course, the rumors that President Trump's
administration was considering appointing Reobert F. Kennedy Jr. to
chair a panel to investigate the CDC and the alleged science behind the
safety of the modern vaccine. In fact, things are so interesting I
don't know whether to categorize this under "Babylon's Banksters" or the
"GMO Scrapbook" or "Call it Conspiracy," and you'll see why in a
moment.

In any case, I say "alleged
science" because it's looking increasingly like there wasn't much of it:
corporately approved "science" continues to assure us that all vaccines
are safe (and that mercury and aluminum in them isn't harmful and
doesn't cause Alzheimers or autism), that all GMOs are safe, that
there's no human cost to their consumption, and that it will solve world
hunger in spite of real studies of rising costs, falling yields, and increased risks.

Underlying
all this, there's a growing revolt against not only Mr. Globaloney, but
against his mega-corporations and what appears to be, at best, a
consistent policy of profits at any cost, and at worst, a deliberate
policy inhumanity designed to depopulate, to strip the middle class of
every last breath of their wealth and labor, and to make people
perpetually sick and dependent upon them. But there's growing backlash
to them. Consider these two stories from that perspective:

India
has, of course, suffered tremendously under the assaults of
"Amerimegacorp" (for want of a better expression). We recall the stories
about vaccine experiments from a few years ago being sponsored by said
foundation. But the timing of this story with the Italian story I
blogged about last week is interesting. Similarly, Indian farmers were
committing suicide a few years ago under the onslaught of GMOs (guess
what company was involved?): loans were made to buy GMO seeds, the cycle
of Indian agriculture was disrupted as natural seeds were abandoned.
The more expensive seeds ruined many Indian farmers. The study cited by
the Indian government captures my fundamental contention that one of the
memes of the major cultural paradigm shift we've been entering for the
past decade: big mega-corporations and their ideologies are now under
assault, and this, I suspect, is a generalized cultural phenomenon that
will not go away. Here's how that study put it:

According
to the Global Policy Forum, who’s study was used in India’s decision to
cut their ties with the Gates Foundation, BMGF is not always a force for good. In their report, Gated Development – is the Gates Foundation always a force for good? — Mark Curtis explains:

Gated
Development demonstrates that the trend to involve business in
addressing poverty and inequality is central to the priorities and
funding of the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation. We argue that this is
far from a neutral charitable strategy but instead an ideological
commitment to promote neoliberal economic policies and corporate
globalisation. Big business is directly benefitting, in particular in
the fields of agriculture and health, as a result of the foundation’s
activities, despite evidence to show that business solutions are not the
most effective.

Perhaps
what is most striking about the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation is
that despite its aggressive corporate strategy and extraordinary
influence across governments, academics and the media, there is an
absence of critical voices. Global Justice Now is concerned that the
foundation’s influence is so pervasive that many actors in international
development, which would otherwise critique the policy and practice of
the foundation, are unable to speak out independently as a result of its
funding and patronage.

The Nigeria article confirms yet another connection:

It
reveals that, Bill Gates and Monsanto in collaboration with the WFP and
World Bank are implicated in the carnage created by Boko Haram’. It is
inevitable that the poor farmers must buy the new seeds from Monsanto or
else they would be out of business. The devastation that awaits the
farmers in the Northeast is even greater than the present. The cost of seeds from Monsanto could go as high as 30 times as was the experience in India with Bt Cotton , where 300,000 farmers committed suicide because they could not meet up with costs of seeds.

Monsanto which is owned in part by Bill Gates,
the American billionaire who is actively engaged in Nigeria personally,
and through several envoys including Melinda Gates, NGOs, and proxies
in the World Bank and Africa Development Bank, has worked relentlessly
to deceive Africa leaders and trick them into approving GMOs and Hybrid
seeds. Bill Gates wants to control the seed market for all foods in
Africa’s most populous nation, Nigeria. (Italicized-bold emphasis
added).

Now throw in one
more context for this emerging trend: the clear involvement of
billionaire busibodies like Gates and Soros in formulation of domestic
and foreign policy via their privileged tax exempt foundations. And
increasingly, their policies and "science" are revealed not only to be
inhuman, but anti-human, regardless of the rationalizations they may tell themselves.

So where am I going with all this? It's time to have a discussion about "charitable foundations" - all
of them - and their relationship to governments and the big
mega-corporations. I think it's high time for another Reece committee
investigation of foundations. And my suggestion for chief counsel for
said committee would Julian Assange. And my suggestion for that putative
committee would be to start at the top: Rockefailure, the billionaire
busybody Gates, Darth Soros, the whole lot of them.

Let's call this moment of history, the "Philippe le Bel" moment of history.

Philip
was, of course, the King of France who - so the official narrative goes
- had so indebted himself and France that he approached the Templar
Order for a loan, and was refused. He then decided to shut down the
order in a coordinated raid on all their houses and preceptories
throughout France, all on one day, via secret and sealed orders. The
reason, he wanted to get his hands on the fabled "Templar Treasure" and
"ledgers and papers." What he found was nothing. And ever since
academics have listed the "fabled Templar Treasure" and "ledgers" as
just another conspiracy theory for which there was no evidence. Templar
fleets had set sail (so the story goes), perhaps taking their archives
and treasure with them. Academics, of course, miss the point, but it's
one that anyone of common sense will understand: the Templar order, the
richest in Europe, was involved in banking, in policy making, in warfare. To find the treasure, to know for sure if they were up to sedition against the King, one had to have the key to all that: not the physical stocks of bullion, but the ledgers, the records. And yet, when Philippe le Bel struck, there was...

... nothing.

Let
that sink in for a moment, and while you do, recall that the chief
council for the Reece committee, Rene Wormser, stated in his book about
that committee, Foundations, Their Power and Influence, that the modern tax-exempt foundation was but a new form of the old mediaeval military crusading orders, like... the Templars.

So
what would such a committee find by summoning and subpoenaing the
records of those foundations? Probably nothing... sanitized records,
missing records... but that, in itself, would speak volumes. Especially
if those foundations have been penetrated, and copies made...